2022 election On June 2, 2021, Hobbs announced her candidacy for
governor of Arizona in the
2022 election to succeed term-limited Republican incumbent
Doug Ducey. Hobbs ran against former
Customs and Border Protection chief of staff
Marco Lopez and former state representative
Aaron Lieberman in the Democratic primary. Despite declining to debate her opponents, she won the Democratic nomination with 72.3% of the vote. Hobbs faced the Republican nominee, former
KSAZ-TV news anchor
Kari Lake, in the general election. Hobbs limited access to reporters, sometimes going out of her way to avoid them, and held small-scale campaign events. She declined to debate Lake, saying she wanted to deny Lake the opportunity to spread
election denialism. Hobbs narrowly defeated Lake with 50.3% of the vote. After the election, Lake refused to concede, and assembled a legal team to contest the election results. In March 2023, the
Arizona Supreme Court declined to hear Lake's lawsuit concerning the election, and in May reaffirmed its decision after a trial.
Tenure Hobbs was sworn in on January 2, 2023, in a private ceremony, followed by a public ceremony on January 5. Upon taking office, she became Arizona's fifth female governor, a record for
U.S. states. In December 2022, she selected Allie Bones, the Arizona assistant secretary of state, as her chief of staff. Bones resigned on May 25, 2023, and was replaced by
Chad Campbell, the former minority leader of the Arizona House of Representatives, on May 31. , February 2023 Since taking office, Hobbs has issued numerous executive orders, including those prohibiting state agencies and all new state contracts or subcontracts from discrimination based on traits of sexual orientation or
gender identity. Hobbs has established several commissions, including an independent prison oversight commission; a commission on homelessness and housing that was abolished in 2020; a bipartisan elections task force; and a task force on
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. In June 2024,
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, a Democrat, opened an investigation into Hobbs after a group home business whose CEO was on her inaugural committee donated $400,000 to her campaign through a
dark money group. The firm received nearly a 60% rate increase for providing
foster care services, making it Arizona's highest-paid provider per day per child.
Abortion On May 2, 2024, Hobbs signed a bill to repeal a near-total
abortion ban from 1864 that the Arizona Supreme Court reinstated on April 9, 2024. The ban was not enforced by
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes, and the repeal took effect on September 14, 2024. As a result of
2024 Arizona Proposition 139, the Arizona constitution codifies abortion's legality up to
fetal viability.
Capital punishment An opponent of
capital punishment, Hobbs voted for an unsuccessful bill in the state legislature to repeal Arizona's death penalty, and posted on
X, "both heinous crimes and the death penalty demean us as a society". As governor, Hobbs has said that her opinion of the death penalty is "irrelevant", and in December 2024, she said she was "not going to talk about" her views on the death penalty, saying that the death penalty is the law in Arizona and that she "is going to follow the law". When Hobbs took office, she
halted executions and was ordered to appear alongside Ryan Thornell, Arizona's prison director, in Maricopa County Superior Court, over her refusal to carry out an execution warrant issued by the Arizona Supreme Court. On January 20, 2023, she ordered a review of the state's death penalty protocols, and hired retired magistrate Judge David Duncan to carry out the review. Arizona conservatives criticized Hobbs for not cooperating with the court-ordered execution of
Aaron Brian Gunches in 2023. After Thornell completed an internal review, Hobbs reversed her executive order that effectively halted executions by ending the review she commissioned Duncan to complete and firing Duncan; shortly thereafter, Attorney General
Kris Mayes requested an execution date for Gunches, who was executed on March 19, 2025. This was the first execution conducted in a state with a Democratic governor in office since
Virginia executed
William Morva under Governor
Terry McAuliffe in 2017. On October 17, 2025,
Richard Djerf became the second person executed in Arizona during Hobbs's governorship, and the first to have exhausted his appellate rights (Gunches waived most of his appeals).
Foreign relations In May 2023, the
Russian government added Hobbs to a list of people permanently banned from entering Russia. The banning came after the Biden administration imposed further sanctions on Russia; others banned from entering Russia include U.S. Representative
Eli Crane and
Arizona State University president
Michael M. Crow. In May 2023, ahead of the repeal of
Title 42, Hobbs announced that the state would establish five new bus routes to transport migrants from small border communities to
Tucson. On December 17, 2023, Hobbs issued an executive order ordering the
Arizona National Guard to the border with Mexico to help federal officials manage an influx of migrants. In 2025, Hobbs vetoed Senate Bill 1164, which would have prevented state agencies and local governments from adopting policies banning cooperation with federal immigration authorities. It would have also required sheriffs and the state prison system to comply with detainer requests from the federal government. Hobbs has argued that immigration enforcement is primarily a federal responsibility, opposing state-level measures that would expand Arizona's role in policing immigration.
Housing In March 2024, Hobbs vetoed bipartisan legislation to increase Arizona's housing supply. The bill would have reduced red tape around housing construction by preventing Arizona municipalities from requiring homeowners' associations, minimum home sizes, and certain building setbacks.
Veto record On April 18, 2023, her 100th day in office, Hobbs set a new record for the most vetoes issued by an Arizona governor in a single legislative session, with 63 vetoes of bills passed by the Republican-majority legislature. The previous record was set by former governor
Janet Napolitano, who vetoed 58 total bills in the 2005 session. Three of the bills vetoed on April 18 passed with a bipartisan supermajority in both the Arizona House and the Arizona Senate. One of them, concerned with
cottage foods and colloquially known as the "tamale bill", became a topic of national conversation after multiple Democratic legislators voiced their opposition to the veto. The bill would have allowed home cooks to sell perishable foods. Although the bill passed with a bipartisan supermajority, a vote to override the veto in the Arizona House of Representatives failed, with only five Democrats voting to override. The other two bills Hobbs vetoed that passed with supermajorities, SB1091 and SB1101, have not been brought forward to an override vote. On May 19, Hobbs vetoed 14 bills passed by the state house and senate, surpassing 100 vetoes in only five months; among them was HB2377, which would have restricted officials from being registered lobbyists while holding public office. ==Personal life==